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Husband Chooses Niece Over Wife Novel Cover

Husband Chooses Niece Over Wife

The emergency room of Kennedy Medical Center buzzed with controlled chaos. Monitors beeped, nurses rushed between beds, and doctors called out orders. I'd just finished reviewing the quarterly reports for the hospital's charitable foundation when the commotion near the reception desk caught my attention. A young woman with perfectly styled blonde hair stood there, sobbing dramatically while cradling a small white dog in her arms. "Please, you have to help Max! He's been coughing all day!" I recognized her immediately—Kaliyah Kennedy, Wesley's so-called niece who had moved into our home three months ago. The name badge on her designer sweater read "Volunteer," though I'd never seen her actually volunteer anywhere. "I'm sorry, miss," the triage nurse said, her voice strained with patience, "but this is a human medical facility. We don't treat animals here." "But Max needs help now!" Kaliyah's voice rose to a pitch that made several patients turn their heads. "He's Wesley Kennedy's dog!" The mention of my husband's name sent a chill down my spine.
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Chapter 2

The Kennedy family charity gala glittered with wealth and power. Crystal chandeliers cast golden light across the ballroom as New York's elite mingled, their jewelry catching the light with every gesture. I stood beside Wesley, my smile fixed in place as he introduced me to yet another business associate.

"Paige, darling, you remember Richard Donovan," Wesley said, his hand pressed firmly against the small of my back.

"Of course," I replied, extending my hand to the silver-haired man. "How's your foundation's work in Africa progressing?"

As we conversed, I noticed Kaliyah across the room. She wore a white dress that made her look deceptively innocent, her blonde hair styled in loose waves that framed her face. She was watching my mother with calculated interest.

Margaret Freeman stood near the champagne fountain, her silver hair elegantly swept up, greeting guests with the grace that had defined her social presence for decades. She'd been the heart of our family's philanthropic efforts long before I married Wesley.

"Excuse me," I said to Richard, catching Wesley's eye. "I need to check on my mother."

Wesley nodded absently, already turning to another group of investors. I moved through the crowd toward my mother, but was stopped by Diana Kennedy's sharp voice.

"Paige, the Vandermeres are asking about the hospital's new wing. You should attend to them."

By the time I extracted myself from Diana's demands and scanned the room again, my mother was engaged in conversation with the mayor's wife. Kaliyah hovered nearby, a champagne flute in her hand.

I watched as my mother finished her conversation and reached for her champagne. Kaliyah moved closer, her body positioning blocking my view of what happened next. When she stepped away, my mother took a sip and continued greeting guests.

Twenty minutes later, I noticed something was wrong. My mother's movements had become unsteady, her smile fixed but unnatural.

"Mom?" I touched her arm gently.

She turned toward me, her eyes unfocused. "Paige? I feel... strange."

Before I could respond, Kaliyah appeared at my side. "Oh no, Margaret looks ill. Let me help her to a private room."

"I've got her," I insisted, but Kaliyah was already guiding my mother away.

"Paige, you're needed at the donation announcement," Wesley appeared, his tone brooking no argument. "Kaliyah will take care of Margaret."

I watched helplessly as Kaliyah led my stumbling mother toward a secluded corridor. Something in her triumphant smile made my blood run cold.

---

Hours later, I found myself pacing outside my mother's bedroom door. The charity gala had ended, but my mother hadn't returned home until nearly dawn, driven by one of Wesley's security staff who claimed she'd fallen asleep in a guest room.

When I knocked, her voice was barely audible. "Come in."

The sight of her shattered me. Margaret Freeman, who had faced every crisis with impeccable composure, sat hunched on the edge of her bed, her phone clutched in trembling hands.

"Mom?" I approached slowly, sitting beside her.

She didn't look up, her eyes fixed on the screen. "They're going to release them," she whispered.

"What? Release what?"

Her phone screen displayed a video thumbnail—my mother, unconscious on what appeared to be a hotel bed. Multiple camera angles showed men moving around her unconscious form.

"No," I gasped, trying to take the phone from her hands.

She pulled away, turning to face me with hollow eyes. "They drugged me, Paige. And they... they violated me while I was unconscious."

The room spun around me as I processed her words. "Who? We need to call the police!"

"They'll release these videos if I do." Her voice cracked as she showed me the message on her screen: *Stay silent or everyone sees what happens to respectable women who don't know their place.*

Over the following days, I watched my mother disintegrate before my eyes. The woman who had always been my strength now moved like a ghost through our home, flinching at unexpected sounds, jumping at shadows.

"Mom, please," I begged one afternoon, finding her staring out the window. "We can fight this. We can get help."

"There is no help for this kind of shame," she replied, her voice distant. "Your father would have died before letting this happen to me."

That night, I found her bathroom empty, the window open despite the autumn chill. On her vanity lay her wedding ring and a single line written on hotel stationary: *I can't bear what they've taken from me.*

I screamed for help, but as I raced through our apartment searching for her, one thought crystallized in my mind: Kaliyah's innocent facade had been just that—a mask for something far more sinister. And somehow, she had orchestrated my mother's destruction with calculated precision.

As sirens wailed in the distance, I clutched my mother's note in my fist, a cold determination replacing my panic. Whatever Kaliyah had done, whatever hold she had over Wesley—I would uncover it, even if it meant tearing apart the life I'd built with my own hands.

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